
TRAJAN`S ROME: THE MAN, THE CITY, THE EMPIRE
... This unit integrates the study of art and history and promotes the development of critical thinking skills. The lessons are organized around primary documents, as are all of the units the NCHS has developed over the last eight years. This unit exploits not only text-based primary sources, however, b ...
... This unit integrates the study of art and history and promotes the development of critical thinking skills. The lessons are organized around primary documents, as are all of the units the NCHS has developed over the last eight years. This unit exploits not only text-based primary sources, however, b ...
The Gracchi-1 - 2010
... he now at once came forward to ask for the tribuneship...” (Plutarch 2). Both the brothers were judged as power-hungry and conspirators, but no evidence was ever brought against them; only empty charges. Not only were their laws just and beneficial to Rome, but the Gracchi reached out to the Roman p ...
... he now at once came forward to ask for the tribuneship...” (Plutarch 2). Both the brothers were judged as power-hungry and conspirators, but no evidence was ever brought against them; only empty charges. Not only were their laws just and beneficial to Rome, but the Gracchi reached out to the Roman p ...
Zenobia and the Rebellion of The Palmyrene Empire
... First of all, I should say that there is some argument about the nature of Zenobia's actual rebellion. Edward Gibbon, in his famous book called The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, says that Zenobia declared herself "Queen of the East" and some historians even say that she had designs on the en ...
... First of all, I should say that there is some argument about the nature of Zenobia's actual rebellion. Edward Gibbon, in his famous book called The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, says that Zenobia declared herself "Queen of the East" and some historians even say that she had designs on the en ...
Column of Trajan
... People in antiquity were able to go up there and view a panorama o over the Basilicia Ulpia(shimmering bronze tiled roof) o Trajan’s Forum The frieze on the column is what it is most known for today It is 200 meters long, with 155 scenes Actual battle scenes are a minority on the column often repeat ...
... People in antiquity were able to go up there and view a panorama o over the Basilicia Ulpia(shimmering bronze tiled roof) o Trajan’s Forum The frieze on the column is what it is most known for today It is 200 meters long, with 155 scenes Actual battle scenes are a minority on the column often repeat ...
Rome - Cloudfront.net
... side, the city center being 12 miles inland from the Tyrrhenian Sea. Tarentum is likely a port town in the south of Italy. ...
... side, the city center being 12 miles inland from the Tyrrhenian Sea. Tarentum is likely a port town in the south of Italy. ...
Gladiator
... History and Origins • Like sporting events in many ancient cultures, Roman gladiatorial combat originated as a religious event. • The Romans claimed that their tradition of gladiatorial games was adopted from the Etruscans, but there is little evidence to support this. • The early games ended not i ...
... History and Origins • Like sporting events in many ancient cultures, Roman gladiatorial combat originated as a religious event. • The Romans claimed that their tradition of gladiatorial games was adopted from the Etruscans, but there is little evidence to support this. • The early games ended not i ...
Forum Function ppt
... evidenced by the five doors from the Forum. Its central nave, and two aisles were originally covered by a sloping roof supported by the massive central Ionic l columns. At the rear was, the tribunal where magistrates sat, reached by wooden steps. ; The side walls were decorated with stucco reliefs S ...
... evidenced by the five doors from the Forum. Its central nave, and two aisles were originally covered by a sloping roof supported by the massive central Ionic l columns. At the rear was, the tribunal where magistrates sat, reached by wooden steps. ; The side walls were decorated with stucco reliefs S ...
Cults - Stratford High School
... • In the republican period, the Roman state, staggering beneath defeats suffered at the hands of Hannibal and needing to bolster the faith of its citizens, introduced to Rome the cult of the goddess Cybele, She was the mistress of nature whose numerous rites marked much of the Roman calendar. Her cu ...
... • In the republican period, the Roman state, staggering beneath defeats suffered at the hands of Hannibal and needing to bolster the faith of its citizens, introduced to Rome the cult of the goddess Cybele, She was the mistress of nature whose numerous rites marked much of the Roman calendar. Her cu ...
Arch of Titus
... to create the image of the horses coming toward the viewer Head of Titus is missing, would have been a portrait carved separately & added to relief. To emphasise him, he is placed high above the ground against empty background – similar to highlighting spoils from the Jerusalem ...
... to create the image of the horses coming toward the viewer Head of Titus is missing, would have been a portrait carved separately & added to relief. To emphasise him, he is placed high above the ground against empty background – similar to highlighting spoils from the Jerusalem ...
Why Did The Romans Invade Britain
... Slaves controlled heating and helped keep the fires blazing. Romans were the first to put arches into buildings and they built roads. They built aqueducts to carry water it was like a bridge on a arch. The Romans used cranes to lift heavy stones on building sites powered by men on a treadmill. Roman ...
... Slaves controlled heating and helped keep the fires blazing. Romans were the first to put arches into buildings and they built roads. They built aqueducts to carry water it was like a bridge on a arch. The Romans used cranes to lift heavy stones on building sites powered by men on a treadmill. Roman ...
The Roman Centurion in the Time of Jesus Christ
... underwent a fundamental transformation as Roman legionaries who had sworn loyalty to their generals did not go back to civil society when the crisis of the moment had passed, but instead were deployed out to the frontiers where they were needed to maintain order. . (In some ways, it is reminiscent o ...
... underwent a fundamental transformation as Roman legionaries who had sworn loyalty to their generals did not go back to civil society when the crisis of the moment had passed, but instead were deployed out to the frontiers where they were needed to maintain order. . (In some ways, it is reminiscent o ...
Crosby Garrett Helmet
... and Roman methods of fortification. A sunken area within the enclosure may possibly have served as a paddock for horses, while the evidence for the buildings is concentrated in the enclosure's northern portion. The remnants of Romano-British field systems in the surrounding area show that the area w ...
... and Roman methods of fortification. A sunken area within the enclosure may possibly have served as a paddock for horses, while the evidence for the buildings is concentrated in the enclosure's northern portion. The remnants of Romano-British field systems in the surrounding area show that the area w ...
Chapter Fifteen The Roman Empire at its Zenith (to 235
... were twenty or thirty times wealthier than the governed, and no effort was made to narrow the gap. As summarized by Ramsay MacMullen, "beginning at about the birth of Cicero, the tendency of the empire's socioeconomic development over five centuries can be compressed into three words: fewer have mor ...
... were twenty or thirty times wealthier than the governed, and no effort was made to narrow the gap. As summarized by Ramsay MacMullen, "beginning at about the birth of Cicero, the tendency of the empire's socioeconomic development over five centuries can be compressed into three words: fewer have mor ...
Roman Afterlives, on Brunelleschi, Boorstin
... each shell, and yet increase the grandeur of the outer shell. He would make a pointed dome supported in sections, with each of the eight sides of the octagon held up by major stone ribs at the angles. There would be two minor ribs within each stone section, and horizontal arches would connect the ma ...
... each shell, and yet increase the grandeur of the outer shell. He would make a pointed dome supported in sections, with each of the eight sides of the octagon held up by major stone ribs at the angles. There would be two minor ribs within each stone section, and horizontal arches would connect the ma ...
Roman_Infrastructure[1]
... Members of the Senate serve 6-year terms. Members of the House of Representatives serve 2-year terms. ...
... Members of the Senate serve 6-year terms. Members of the House of Representatives serve 2-year terms. ...
Roman Republic: Government Mini-‐Sim
... The Consul was two elected rulers for a one year term. These consuls were elected by a group of ordinary ci9zens known as an assembly, and the consuls were given advice by a group of rich ...
... The Consul was two elected rulers for a one year term. These consuls were elected by a group of ordinary ci9zens known as an assembly, and the consuls were given advice by a group of rich ...
Ancient Roman architecture

Ancient Roman architecture developed different aspects of Ancient Greek architecture and newer technologies such as the arch and the dome to make a new architectural style. Roman architecture flourished throughout the Empire during the Pax Romana. Its use of new materials, particularly concrete, was a very important feature.Roman Architecture covers the period from the establishment of the Roman Republic in 509 BC to about the 4th century AD, after which it becomes reclassified as Late Antique or Byzantine architecture. Most of the many surviving examples are from the later period. Roman architectural style continued to influence building in the former empire for many centuries, and the style used in Western Europe beginning about 1000 is called Romanesque architecture to reflect this dependence on basic Roman forms.The Ancient Romans were responsible for significant developments in housing and public hygiene, for example their public and private baths and latrines, under-floor heating in the form of the hypocaust, mica glazing (examples in Ostia Antica), and piped hot and cold water (examples in Pompeii and Ostia).